general presentation. why: the changing humanitarian landscape… challenges
TRANSCRIPT
General Presentation
Why: The changing humanitarian landscape…Challenges
Opportunities
Why: Changing Humanitarian Landscape• More severe and frequent crises – 100 million people
seeking humanitarian assistance in each of the last three years. People with humanitarian needs will double between 1990 and 2025.
• Limited resources – funding requirements have more than doubled to over USD 10 billion per year. Losses due to disaster amont to USD 100 bn. Yet not enough investment in preparedness and prevention (only 3% spent on prevention and preparedness)
• New actors and models of assistance. Technology, access to information, mobile phones, 50% of developing countries will have access to internet – access to information.
In September 2013, the UN S-G called for a World Humanitarian Summit in 2016.
All humanitarian stakeholders – governments, UN, NGOs, affected communities, the private sector and other partners – will come together to build from successes and create an agenda for the future, that is:
inclusive, effective and accountable
Objectives
Set a forward-looking humanitarian agenda, to ensure the humanitarian system is fit to respond to future
challenges.
•The summit will be an opportunity to take stock of achievements, share lessons and good practices.
•First ever World Humanitarian Summit in May 2016 in Istanbul, Turkey.
The Summit process will seek input from four stakeholders
Meeting the humanitarian
needs of people
Associated partners•Private sector•Militaries•Charities and foundations•South-South bilateral
Formal international network of humanitarian organizations•UN agencies, regional and international organizations•Civil society organizations - international, regional, national •Think tanks and academia
National governments•Affected countries, donors and interested governments
Community responders•Affected people and their local and community organizations•Diaspora
Connectivity
and
interoperability
Connectivity and
interoperability
Connectivity and
interoperability Connectivit
y and
interoperability
WHAT: Four Themes
Themes will be developed and defined through consultations with partners
Partnerships
- Strengthening the capacity of the humanitarian system to reach people with lifesaving assistance and protection, prevent and respond to displacement, and meet the specific needs created by violence in urban settings.
- Elements: protection, access, displacement
- Accountability to needs and expectations of affected people, host states, donors, agencies, implementing organizations
- Definitions, principles and systems
- Elements: transparency, accountability, performance, professionalization, standardization, data sharing
- New business model to align humanitarian and development approaches in a more complex operating environment
- Joined-up planning, prioritizing and funding programs
- Elements: Disaster risk reduction, resilience, transition, preparedness, capacity building
- Explore strategic ways to adapt and improve – a proactive vs. reactive system
- Creating a system that is open to experimentation and systematic thinking about improvement
- Identify and implement new products, processes and positions to face operational challenges
Types of Consultations
• Thematic consultations• Regional consultations • Online platform • Linkages with ongoing processes: post-
2015; Sendai; Climate Change Conference
Regional ConsultationsRegion Timeframe
1 Western and Central Africa (in Abidjan) 19-20 June 2014
2 North and Southeast Asia (in Tokyo) 23-24 July 2014
3 South and East Africa October 2014
4 Eastern and Western Europe and Other Groups (WEOG)
February 2015
5 Middle East and North Africa March 2015
6 Latin America and the Caribbean (in Guatemala) April 2015
7 Pacific Islands Q2-2015
8 South and Central Asia Q2 or Q3-2015
9 Global Consultation Q4 – 2015
Online Consultations
Inform, Update, Engage
•Launches on 5 May 2014•Share information about WHS process•Reach a ‘wider’ audience•Provide a forum for discussions, voting, collaboration•Solicit input for regional consultations•Share findings during/between regional consultations
Architecture• World Humanitarian Summit Secretariat• Thematic Teams• Regional Steering Groups
• Support to regional and global consultations
• Advocacy and outreach• Internal and external
communications• Management of online
consultations • Coordination of regional input
to Secretary- General’s report• Support to summit
organisation
• Support to work of thematic teams
• Support drafting of background documents for regional consultations.
• Overall drafting and coordination of Secretary- General’s Report
• Connectivity with other related ongoing thematic initiatives (UN system and humanitarian)
• Support to summit organisation
• Liaise with Geneva humanitarian community on all outputs
• General operational support including procurement, HR, logistics and finance
• Financial and donor reporting
• IATI (transparency)
A summit secretariat is being set up on behalf of the S-Gto facilitate the process and deliver on the target outputs
World Humanitarian Summit Thematic Team Structure
Task Team Members:Core team of 8-10 experts to contribute 20-30% of full time at home organization to design and carry out consultations with broader network of experts, gather substantive inputs and draft recommendations to set Summit agenda.
Global network of thematic experts
Global Expert Network:Experts on each theme from around the world and across the humanitarian community are brought in on an as-needed basis to contribute views, lessons learned and substantive inputs – no cumbersome ‘working group’ commitment
WHS Thematic Coordinator:Experts on each theme are based in WHS Secretariat to lead work of thematic task teams and ensure that the concrete asks and recommendations are generated to shape the Summit agenda by mid-2015 - time commitment is 100%.
Thematic Team Members (30%)
WHS Thematic Coordinator(100%, P4)
Intergovernmental and post-2015 discussions
RCs/HCs
Listening ProjectOngoing Feedback from interviews with affected
people
Occasional workshops and brainstorming sessions
Private sector consultations
Regional consultations with four constituencies
Ongoing processes:IASC, WEF, DRD, etc.
Agency contributions
Regional Steering Groups• 1 Regional Steering Group/ Regional
Consultation• Co-Chairs: Host country +++ • Secretariat: OCHA• Function: issues/theme, agenda, participants,
input into background doc, endorsement of report from regional consultation, network
Join us. www.worldhumanitariansummit.org